DAILY NEBRASJKAN Tues'dcry, April 27, 353 Sprague FORTY-THIRD TEAR Subscription Rates are $1.00 Per Semester or $1.50 for the College Year. $2.50 Mailed. Single copy, 6 Cents. En tered as second-class matter at the postofice in Lincoln, Nebraska, under Act of Congress March 8, 1879, and at special rate of postage provided for in Section 1103. Act ot October 3, 1917. Authorized September SO. 1922. Published daily during the school year except Mon days and Saturdays, vacations and examinations periods by Students of the university of Nebraska under the su fcofvision of the Publications Board. EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT. Managing Editors. . . .George Abbott, Marjorle May News Editors. .. .John Bauermeister, Pat Chamber lin, June Jamieson, Marylouise Goodwin, Dale Wolf. Sports Editor.... Norris Anderson. Editor Alan Jacobs Business Manager Betty Dixon Offices Union Building. Day 2-7181. Night 2-7103 Journal 2-S330. Spring, Army Make Ed Wander, Wonder Every editor has a right to wonder and wander editorially when it is spring and espe cially when he is situated in the library away from the exciting activities of the campus. Stretching literary license to the utmost, we keep wanting to write about Ivy day, the army flags, the university, the American peo ple and spring at the same time. So that is what we propose to do. Unlike last year when everybody knew who the new Mortar Board were long before they were masked, we sit in the library won dering who will be cheated out of the honor this year, whether anybody wil hang around to see the masking, if the Kappas and Alpha Phis will be celebrating the membership of two black-robed gals, whether the whole thing makes sense. Then we wonder about the Ivy day queen lind her court. Everybody says that the royal title rests between two sorority girls, Delta Gamma and Theta, but pre-Ivy day whisper ings are usually inaccurate. That satisfies the Ivy day urge; now we wonder and wonder why : 1. Why there is no flag at the library where 600 soldiers are now stationed and where there is, by the way, what appears to be a sat isfactory flag pole. 2. Why the newly tapped Innocents do not throw the best party of the year before school ends as they have been planning to do. 3. Why university students are so indif ferent to everything going on in the world, all engrossed in petty campus activities. 4. Why the American people have found it so difficult to accept compulsory military training in peacetime. The army builds up men in war or in peace. 5. Why the EOTO was not activiated six months ago when the UN men could have had real taste of the army before beginning the G. I. grind. 6. Why the people of Nebraska, the legis lature in particular, have not yet woken up to the fact that the state university' has slipped and is slipping from every standpoint : Phys ical, faculty, enrolment. 7. Why in the springtime and in the short period of time this editor devotes daily to the Nebraskan, he cannot write a coherent, unified editorial. It's either the spring or the army. Probably the former. Veee Mail Clippings . Pat Chamberlin, Censor Lt. RICHARD F. MARSHALL, whe en listed with the army air corps last year, is now stationed in Africa. He received his trainng in Texas, graduating irom the Lubcock army flymg school last November. Second Lt. CLARENCE E. FLICK and Second Lt. ELMER J. JACKSON, at UN until last year, have been promoted to the rank of first lieutenants at their station, Camp Shelby, Miss. Both are on the regimental staff. At UN Lieutenant Hick was active with the Uni versity Players. I Ay k i LJ A j li ni."-li.iiin. li inn i -: 2nd LI. Flick. tad 14. Jaeksoa. Lt. Marshall. Courtesy of Lincoln Journal. Aesculanins. and started lookine medical. I politely e&me to attention, and the lieutenant muttered something complimen tary about my military angle. Then he poked me in the middle of my swelling, and I yelled. "Il-mmmm," he commented. "Come with me. I want the captain to see your throat." The captain was working a eross word puzzle and immediately assumed a bored attitude as we approached. When he saw my distorted jaw line, he put his fingers over his nose, presumably to keep out germs, and yelled, "Take him away. He's sot the mumps." After that ordeal I was introduced to someone wearing a German measle rash, and told to wait until the ambulance was ready to leave for the station hospital. My measled friend and I immediately became social outcasts, when the more healthy Lsoldiers in the room moved quickly away from us. We got a private seat in the ambulance, and began to get ine reeling mar, no one loved us. At the station hospital, I was poked and questioned by some more medical officers, and finally everyone agreed that I really ought to take my mumps to bed. So at last I was wel comed to the mumps ward of the isolation annex by a bunch of eood fellows who were recovering from what I had just ac quired. Everyone was most happy to meet a new victim and, assure him that his fourteen days m bed woud be most eiw joyable. XTnr T Iia ninflllr in ViA snA wait fnr mv fmiTtpn 1nvs in nass. Once a dav I am exposed to medicine when the medical officer in charge stumbles past my bed and smiles sweetly. I spend the rest of the day waiting patiently for a nurse to come . . t i i. . J in to take my puise ana temperaiurc. xuumps.may come arm mumps may go, but my right jaw will chew on for a while yet. tt n a i n Elmer Sprague. CARLYLE HUMMEL, pharmacist mate 3c who has been on active duty at the naval hospital at San Diego, has been transferred to a laboratory technician school in the naval hos pital at Bethesda, Md. He attended UN last year. JACK L FENSLER, at Nebraska last year, graduated this month from the AAF advanced flying school at Williams Field, Chandler, Ariz., as flight officer. Cpl. EDDIE N. DUCKWORTH was re cently graduated from Chanutc Field, 111., as an engine specialist. A graduate of the dulf port, Miss., airplane mechanic school, he is now stationed at Kelly Field, Texas. He has been in the air corps since last September, e pi If l.V if J l Jack U reaskr. Cat, Dackwwtk. Carrto m.tl Courtesy ot Lincoln Journal. Snooping into the Rag Tag files, Nebraska newsletter sent each month to Comhuskers in the service by the War Council, reveals that Lt. LEONARD J. STUART has been trans f erred to Fort Lewis, Wash., Capt. DONALD BAIRD to Cheyenne, Wyo., and Lt. DONALD E. MACKENZIE, is now at the Bombardier headquarters, Kirkland Field, Albuquerque, New Mexico. All three fellows say in their letters how much they appreciate any news of home. Get on those pens, Huskers still at braska . . . Senior . (Continued From Page 1.) their money directly to the Ne braskan office and their names .will be placed on the roll of honor. Men living In the library will be treated as a separate group and not solicited with their respec tive fraternities. Bob Fast will be in charge of collections. Hundred percent groups are Gamma Phi Beta, Alpha Omicron Pi, Alpha Chi Omega, Sigma Al pha Epsilon, Sigma Phi Epsilon, eDlta Delta Delta, Alpha XI Delta, Sigma Kappa, Delta Gamma, Chi Omega, Kappa Alpha Theta, Al pha Gamma Rho, Sigma Delta Tau, Delta Upsilon, Farm House, Kappa Sigma, Zeta Beta Tau. Honor Roll. 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Mr ST, NEW YORK (Continued From Pag t-) Claudia , (Continued From Page 1.) down left front, and he works out two ingenius affairs for doors. Each actor and actress who ascends or descends those stairs swears he takes his life in his hands every time, for those stairs end at the top in a narrow 20 inch square piece with a big crack down the center. It creaks and groans under the slightest weight. But that isn't all the stairs lead ing down to the floor behind stage are narrow, uneven and high. Mr. Z.'s mechanical desires are expressed in the two doors at the back of the stage. His pride and joy is a double door that rolls smoothly and noiselessly into place. The door leading to the lawn beyond is a model of the old colonial and Dutch variety which opens from either the top or bot tom, or both if the players want to go in or out. The behind stage property is topped off by a tiny dressing room for the leading lady's quick change from glamorous togs to sweater and skirt during the second act Texas is the No. 1 state in the nation in production of raw food materials, reports Dr. A. B. Cox, University of Texas business re search director. ASK -flfn,Crt oTTW.vV f I 0H, FOR AN ICl-CCIV COCA-COLA" . WRITING HpASOqr'i I WISH KCDULDT A r' . ( en nnwu riwar C0MIR TOR A . unu rut ca ue. ' - s I w rem. r it X even a aenerol in Africa recalled hoDDV momenti with ice-cold Coca-Cola. There's tomething about Coca-Cola. Ever notice how yoo ajjociate it with hop py moments? There's that deficiovs tcite you don't find this side of Coca-Cola, itself. It's a chummy drink that people tike right-cvi-of the-bottle. Yes siree. the onlv thina like Coca-Cola is Coca-Cola, itself." lOmro UN0M MJTHOWTY OP TMf COCA-COU COMfArlY IY LINCOLN COCA-COLA BOTTLING CO. 1121 G St 2.5357